http://www.aquasana.com/category.php?category_id=1
http://www.globalceuticals.org/master_detox_research
http://colloidalsilverresearch.com/coll120.htm
The World Health Organization (WHO) has estimated that water-borne disease causes 1.8 million deaths annually, of which 1.5 million are of children under five.
Bill & Melinda Gates foundation donated $13 million to get all the third world countries devices to test for E.coli, enabling detection of ten E. coli colonies in 100ml of water – equivalent to finding a single coffee bean in 4,000 Olympic-size swimming pools.
Halifax, Nova Scotia - Scallop shells can be used to clean up polluted water, three teenagers in Halifax have discovered.
James Beaton-Johnson, Elias Fares and Amy Trottier began their award-winning research as Grade 12 students. They say the shells can be used to clean up contaminated rivers, lakes and even Halifax Harbour.
Apparently 'natural climate change' needs to kill about 2.6 billion humans to ensure we've got enough clean water and natural resources.
Personally I'm still for a giant super-conducting water elevator shelter connecting sea floor minerals to orbiting solar farms. That'll take care of a billion if we're lucky. The rest just need to get water purification devices, capturing systems, silver production, or scallop shells.
Maybe with a billion new vacancies from talented people, from undeveloped places can fill in their roles. Or what, wait out the storm for the relief efforts? Tsunamis killing hundreds of thousands are a minor little teaser. We can't just sit back and apply philosophies of inevitabilities. Think of the 5,000 children a day dying of cholera and e.coli.
A big volcanic eruption might even spare needless grief. God knows the extra-terrestrials wouldn't be expecting it.
http://www.globalceuticals.org/master_detox_research
http://colloidalsilverresearch.com/coll120.htm
The World Health Organization (WHO) has estimated that water-borne disease causes 1.8 million deaths annually, of which 1.5 million are of children under five.
Bill & Melinda Gates foundation donated $13 million to get all the third world countries devices to test for E.coli, enabling detection of ten E. coli colonies in 100ml of water – equivalent to finding a single coffee bean in 4,000 Olympic-size swimming pools.
Halifax, Nova Scotia - Scallop shells can be used to clean up polluted water, three teenagers in Halifax have discovered.
James Beaton-Johnson, Elias Fares and Amy Trottier began their award-winning research as Grade 12 students. They say the shells can be used to clean up contaminated rivers, lakes and even Halifax Harbour.
Apparently 'natural climate change' needs to kill about 2.6 billion humans to ensure we've got enough clean water and natural resources.
Personally I'm still for a giant super-conducting water elevator shelter connecting sea floor minerals to orbiting solar farms. That'll take care of a billion if we're lucky. The rest just need to get water purification devices, capturing systems, silver production, or scallop shells.
Maybe with a billion new vacancies from talented people, from undeveloped places can fill in their roles. Or what, wait out the storm for the relief efforts? Tsunamis killing hundreds of thousands are a minor little teaser. We can't just sit back and apply philosophies of inevitabilities. Think of the 5,000 children a day dying of cholera and e.coli.
A big volcanic eruption might even spare needless grief. God knows the extra-terrestrials wouldn't be expecting it.
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